Construction Dust Monitoring in Edinburgh
Real-time PM&sub10; / PM&sub2;.&sub5; boundary monitoring, Frisbee deposited dust gauges and Trigger Action Plans for Edinburgh construction and demolition sites. IAQM 2024 framework; designed to discharge City of Edinburgh Council planning conditions. Chartered consultants covering South-East Scotland.
Construction dust monitoring for Edinburgh sites
Edinburgh has a significant construction pipeline across the Granton waterfront regeneration, the Edinburgh BioQuarter, the St James Quarter and the constant Old Town refurbishment programme. Many of these sit within IAQM Medium or High Risk and end up with a real-time dust monitoring requirement as a CEMP discharge condition.
We provide MCERTS-grade real-time PM10 boundary monitoring and Frisbee deposited dust gauges for Edinburgh construction sites, with Trigger Action Plans written to match City of Edinburgh Council’s standard discharge expectations.
Air Dust Odour designs, installs and operates real-time PM&sub10; boundary monitoring schemes across South-East Scotland, with monthly compliance reports written to discharge City of Edinburgh Council dust conditions. Schemes are designed and signed off by Malcolm Pounder CEnv MIAQM, a Chartered Environmentalist and Full Member of the Institute of Air Quality Management.
Our Edinburgh Construction Dust Monitoring Services
IAQM 2024 framework throughout, MCERTS-grade instruments and reports written to discharge City of Edinburgh Council conditions.
Real-Time PM&sub10; / PM&sub2;.&sub5; Boundary Monitoring
MCERTS-grade real-time particulate monitors with telemetry, deployed at the Edinburgh site boundary nearest sensitive receptors. Live 1-minute and 15-minute averages, automatic exceedance alerts, monthly compliance reports against the IAQM and TAP thresholds.
Deposited Dust Gauges (Frisbee / Bergerhoff)
Frisbee gauges per BS 1747-1 / Vaughan & Hall and (where the council specifies them) Bergerhoff gauges per VDI 2119, read weekly or monthly at the agreed Edinburgh sensitive receptor locations and analysed gravimetrically against the IAQM 200 mg/m²/day threshold.
Trigger Action Plan & CEMP Support
We draft the Trigger Action Plan and the CEMP dust section to match the planning condition wording, agree it with City of Edinburgh Council, and provide the monitoring backup to discharge the condition.
Demolition-Phase Intensive Monitoring
Higher-density monitoring schemes for Edinburgh demolition projects — typically 6 to 12 weeks of weekly or fortnightly reporting alongside the real-time PM data, because demolition is the highest-dust phase of most projects.
Edinburgh & Surrounding Areas
We cover Edinburgh and the wider South-East Scotland, with no per-mile travel surcharges.
Frequently Asked Questions
When does a Edinburgh construction project need real-time dust monitoring?
Most Edinburgh construction projects classified as Medium or High Risk under the IAQM 2014/2024 dust framework end up with a planning condition or Section 106 obligation that requires real-time PM10 boundary monitoring and deposited dust gauges throughout the demolition, earthworks and construction phases. Typical triggers in Edinburgh include residential schemes of 50+ dwellings, commercial schemes of 10,000+ m², any works close to the Edinburgh AQMAs and the Edinburgh LEZ, and any major demolition. City of Edinburgh Council typically requires CEMPs and TAPs for Medium and High Risk schemes, with monthly compliance reporting throughout demolition, earthworks and construction.
What does Edinburgh City of Edinburgh Council typically require?
City of Edinburgh Council typically requires the DMP / CEMP dust chapter discharged as a pre-commencement condition. The standard package is a written Dust Management Plan (DMP) or CEMP, a Trigger Action Plan with numerical action levels for PM10 (typically 190 µg/m³ investigation, 250 µg/m³ action, 500 µg/m³ stop-works on a 15-minute rolling average), at least one MCERTS-grade real-time PM10 monitor at the boundary nearest sensitive receptors, deposited dust gauges (Frisbee per Vaughan & Hall) at named sensitive receptor locations, and monthly compliance reports submitted to the council.
What sensitive receptors matter most in Edinburgh?
Sensitive receptors include the dense residential areas of Leith, Newington and Marchmont, the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, the Western General Hospital, the University of Edinburgh and Heriot-Watt, multiple schools and the New Town / Old Town World Heritage areas.
How quickly can you install a Edinburgh monitoring scheme?
From a confirmed instruction we can usually install a Edinburgh monitoring scheme within 10 to 15 working days — faster where a planning deadline or HSE Improvement Notice requires it. The Trigger Action Plan and discharge package are typically drafted in parallel with the procurement and can be submitted to City of Edinburgh Council as soon as the scheme is live.
How much does construction dust monitoring cost in Edinburgh?
A typical 12-month single-location real-time PM10 monitoring scheme in Edinburgh (one MCERTS-grade monitor with met sensor, telemetry, monthly reporting and 24/7 alert handling) starts from around £6,000 to £9,000 plus VAT for the year. A two-location scheme with weekly deposited dust gauge readings adds approximately £4,000 to £6,000 per year. Short-term demolition-phase monitoring (typically 6 to 12 weeks) starts from around £2,500 to £4,500. Travel within South-East Scotland is included in the quoted fee. See our cost guide for related pricing.